Almodôvar


Almodôvar, officially known as Town of Almodôvar, is a town and a municipality in the District of Beja, Portugal. The population in 2011 was 7,449, in an area of 777.88 km2.
The present Mayor is António Bota, a member of the Socialist Party.
The town's Museum of Southwestern Writing is featured on episode 1 of the three part documentary The Celts: Blood, Iron and Sacrifice, which was broadcast by the BBC in 2015, and hosted by Alice Roberts and Neil Oliver, featuring stone tables containing what some archeologists believe to be a proto-Celtic language.

Parishes

The municipality is subdivided into the following parishes:

History

The village of Almodôvar is signaled in medieval Islamic cartography under the name al-Mudawwar meaning "thing in round" or "surrounded in round". The settlement was rebuilt at the time of the Umayyad [conquest of Hispania|Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula], with walls surrounding it and a castle inside. Remains of these have, however, disappeared.
Almodôvar received its first Foral on April 17, 1285, by order of King Dinis of Portugal, confirmed by a new Foral on June 1, 1512, by order of King Manuel I of Portugal.

Geography

The Almodôvar area is situated in an area of transition between the Alentejo peneplain, in the northernmost part of the municipality, and the hills of the Serra do Caldeirão to the south of its territory. The Iberian Pyrite Belt which begins in Aljustrel and spreads through the lower Alentejo extending into Southern Spain crosses the area of the municipality.

Climate

The municipality experiences a Mediterranean climate with hot, dry summers and mild wet winters.

Notable people